Dionne Warwick is suing a rights firm that says it negotiated the “Walk On By” sample in Doja Cat's “Paint the Town Red," claiming it stole millions.
On this day in 1963, Bobby “Blue” Bland ruled the R&B charts with a timeless love song.
Sir Rod Stewart, 81, rocked a sold-out show in St. Augustine, performing hits like "Maggie May" and "Forever Young." ...
If “Golden” from KPop Demon Hunters wins the Oscar for best original song at the awards ceremony on March 15, it will set ...
On March 9, 1961, legendary Motown girl group The Supremes released their first single, “I Want a Guy.” ...
By Jessica Lynch Country Joe McDonald, the counterculture musician whose Vietnam War protest anthem “I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-to-Die Rag” became a defining song of the 1960s protest movement, has died ...
Sixty-three years ago this week, one of the biggest pop groups of the early 1960s made Billboard history. On March 2, 1963, ...
If you can last long enough, people take you seriously,” says Cher, who scored her first No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 ...
A Dionne Warwick song first appeared on the Billboard charts in 1962. Since then, she's had 18 songs in the top 20, and this ...
The last of Neil Sedaka's three Hot 100-toppers was "Bad Blood," a mean groover assisted by his label boss, Elton John. Here's how it reached No. 1.
Billboard's "Coda" column looks back at historic chart moments in country music, focusing on Dwight Yoakam's 1986 'Honky Tonk' chart debut.